Thank you for your explanation. I apologize for being dense, but what is a 2 x 2 twill? Is there a source of information where I can find the basics so I do not have to ask what must be elementary -- and no doubt boring , to the rest of the forum -- questions? Am I correct, beyond the weaving technique issue, in believing a gunclub to be a "clean", orthogonal pattern, and a hounsdstooth to appear "messy" or jagged, as Michael aptly puts it?alden wrote:A houndstooth colour and weave effect is produced with a combination of 4 and 4, or 8 and 8, threads of contrasting colours in the warp crossed with similar wefts and woven in a 2 and 2 twill to form a jagged check. The gunclub is the same except it is a 6 and 6 color combination woven in a 2 x 2 twill.
M Alden
Donegal tweed: are you referring to the suit pictures in my opening post, or am I missing something? As far as I know, that is a West of England cloth, not a Donegal. I have a tweed coat in Donegal, and it is a very different, softer, cloth, with what appear to be dots, or tufts, of various colour threads with no visible pattern.ottovbvs wrote:The Donegal tweed as shown in the pics is actually a fairly sophisticated "flat" version and this works very well as does a quiet herringbone tweed with the silk threads. I think the key is a quiet look. The really big window panes in a suit worn in the city look a bit ott. You can get away with them in a sportcoat for casual city wear with flannels or cords at the weekend but that's about it.
Frog in Suit